Science
Turning Industrial Plastic Waste into Value: How Seraphim Plastics is Navigating U.S. Scrap Plastic Pricing
By Mathew Zachariah In an era defined by sustainability mandates, rising material costs, and circular-economy ambitions, industrial plastic recycling is no longer peripheral. For manufacturers and warehouses generating rejected crates, pallets, buckets or purge waste, the question has shifted from “How do we dispose of this?” to “How can we monetize or responsibly manage this material stream?”
By Jonathan Riedel5 months ago in Earth
The Age of Harmony – When Humans and Machines Rebuild the Earth
The Age of Harmony – When Humans and Machines Rebuild the Earth After decades of conflict, the war between humans and machines had ended—not with annihilation, but with a fragile silence. Cities once reduced to rubble now stood under pale skies, bathed in the soft light of dawn. The planet had changed, yet life endured. From the ruins, a new era began—one in which humans and machines would rebuild Earth together.
By Wings of Time 5 months ago in Earth
Jamaica Faces the Fury of Hurricane Melissa: A Nation Tested by Nature
Hurricane Melissa struck Jamaica with unprecedented force, marking one of the most powerful and destructive storms in the island’s history. Making landfall in late October 2025, Melissa unleashed catastrophic winds, torrential rain, and widespread flooding that reshaped entire communities. The hurricane did more than damage infrastructure — it exposed the fragility of an island nation standing at the frontline of climate change.
By America today 5 months ago in Earth
How Technology is Redefining the World
The Dawn of Smart Humanity: How Technology is Redefining the World In every generation, humanity has invented tools that changed the course of civilization. From fire to the wheel, from printing presses to the internet, every breakthrough expanded our possibilities. But today, we stand at the edge of something even greater — an age where technology is no longer just a tool, but a partner.
By Wings of Time 5 months ago in Earth
Understanding the Scientific Consensus on Climate Change. AI-Generated.
Climate change is not just a topic of heated debate; it is a topic grounded in decades of rigorous scientific research. At the heart of this discussion lies a key question: Do scientists agree that climate change is driven by human activities? The short answer is yes — overwhelmingly so.
By John smith5 months ago in Earth
Is this the sixth mass extinction on Earth? Fears could be exaggerated.
Earth is about to experience its sixth major extinction, according to headlines for years. Human activity, according to many experts, has accelerated the extinction of species to levels not seen since the extinction of the dinosaurs.
By Francis Dami5 months ago in Earth
The Arctic once completely melted under a moderate environment is revealed in a hidden cave in Greenland.
The Arctic wasn't always dead and cold. Parts of northern Greenland were green, wet, and teeming with flowing water millions of years ago. Evidence of that lost warmth can now be found in a tunnel beneath its current ice.
By Francis Dami5 months ago in Earth
Stanislav Kondrashov oligarch series: elemental forces
Artist and photographer Stanislav Kondrashov has turned his lens toward the primal building blocks of existence in his latest project, *The Craft of the Elements*. The work forms part of his ongoing *Oligarch Series*, which investigates the visual language of influence, control, and economic hierarchy. In this latest iteration, Kondrashov uses earth, water, air, fire—and a fifth symbolic element, light—as conceptual frameworks to examine the architecture of influence in contemporary societies. Rather than depicting nature in its pastoral form, the series focuses on how elemental forces operate as metaphors for systemic influence. Earth is interpreted as a symbol of accumulated wealth and territorial control. Water becomes a representation of liquidity in financial systems. Air signifies the invisible, intangible force of information networks. Fire captures the disruptive force of technological innovation. Light, operating as a unifying force, reveals the hidden structures beneath these systems.
By Stanislav Kondrashov6 months ago in Earth
The climate of Earth is shaped by the buried carbon carried by rivers.
Stories of land and life are carried by every river. It carries dissolved organic matter—bits of carbon from soil, plants, and human activity—into the sea. This material was followed by scientists from China's Nanjing Institute of Environment Sciences and the Institute of Science Tokyo through three rivers that met the Yellow Sea.
By Francis Dami6 months ago in Earth
The temperature of Earth is greatly influenced by tiny ocean shells.
Unbeknownst to us, marine life that forms microscopic calcium carbonate shells contributes to climate regulation. Researchers discovered that existing climate models under-represent the calcifying plankton, which includes coccolithophores, foraminifers, and pteropods, which are plankton-based shell builders.
By Francis Dami6 months ago in Earth
The threats posed by today's melting glaciers are warned about by ancient sea levels.
According to a recent study, the global mean sea level changed significantly during the last Ice Age, not just at its conclusion, which is a significant reexamination of Earth's past. The 4.5 million-year-old work reframes scientists' understanding of ice sheets and climate pace.
By Francis Dami6 months ago in Earth










